After conducting a review of work students were sent home with, Principal Stephanie Brant and her staff concluded the majority of assignments were worksheets that did not relate to what students were studying in the classroom.

“It was just: we were giving students something because we felt we had to give them something,” Brant told the station.

Most parents support the no-homework policy. Luz Gomez, whose son is a third-grader at the school, told Fox 5: "When [my son] comes home, he has relaxing time. And I think kids need that relaxing time."

The Washington Examiner reports that elsewhere, in Vienna, Va., Cunningham Park Elementary School instituted a “Homework Bill of Rights” that prevents teachers from grading homework and assigning it over weekends or holidays.

"Who are we as educators to dictate how families spend their private time?" Principal Rebecca Baenig asked in a presentation to the Fairfax County Public School Board.

According to the Examiner, South Lakes High School in Reston, Va., will implement a similar bill of rights this year that, among other things, prohibits homework from counting for more than 10 percent of a student’s grade. The policy echoes one that was rolled out last June by the Los Angeles Unified School District, the country's second largest school system.